Author:
McMullin Jess,Varnhagen Connie K.,Heng Pheng,Apedoe Xornam
Abstract
The World Wide Web (Web) is becoming a popular medium for transmission of information and online learning. We need to understand how people comprehend information from the Web to design Web sites that maximize the acquisition of information. We examined two features of Web page design that are easily modified by developers, namely line length and the amount of surrounding information, or whitespace. Undergraduate university student participants read text and answered comprehension questions on the Web. Comprehension was affected by whitespace; participants had better comprehension for information surrounded by whitespace than for information surrounded by meaningless information. Participants were not affected by line length. These findings demonstrate that reading from the Web is not the same as reading print and have implications for instructional Web design.
Publisher
University of Alberta Libraries
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,Computer Science Applications,Education
Cited by
3 articles.
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